The (Few) Ways Vista Makes Office Work Better

Office 2007 gains some extra oomph when run on Windows Vista rather than on Windows XP.

Microsoft's co-launch of Office 2007 and Windows Vista to the general public was the first time since Windows 95 that the company released an operating system and office productivity suite on the same day. And it may be (a bit) more than just coincidence or a marketing push. Chris Capossela, who's Microsoft's corporate VP in charge of the Office line, says that Office 2007 gains some extra oomph when run on Vista than on XP.

It's not a sea change, but there are some new tricks. "Just about everything in Office 2007 works on XP," he says. "But there are a few things that are special to Vista." Here's a list of how Office 2007 -- or, in fact, any version of Office -- can benefit from Vista's new features:

-- Integrated search: Office 2007 is able to leverage Vista's underlying Instant Search functionality, whereas there is no such thing in Office 2007 on XP without downloading Windows Desktop Search 3.0 for Windows XP or a third-party application like Google Desktop. How does it work? In one scenario, someone looking for Word documents mentioning a specific name can just type the name into a box in the Start menu and voila, up comes a list of files that contain matching text inside of documents.

-- Security: BitLocker Drive Encryption, found in Vista Ultimate and Enterprise editions, addresses the threats of lost or stolen laptops and PCs, preventing thieves and hackers from viewing those sensitive documents. There's tons of encryption software out there for XP, but Vista builds it right in.

-- RSS feeds: Syndicated feeds aren't good only for news and blogs. They can also track documents, sales leads, to-do lists, calendars, and more. Vista has a common data store for applications to access RSS information, as well as a download engine for RSS feeds. That allows users to do things like pull calendar data from a conference Web site directly into their Outlook calendars.